The Mercury News

Composting human remains could soon be legal in California

Supporters say returning bodies to the soil is a natural, greener option

- By Marissa Garcia Variety

Two wheelbarro­ws full — that’s how much soil a composted human body creates. In California, it could soon be legal for people to be transforme­d into soil after death.

Only three after-death options are available now in California: burial and cremation — by fire or water. But a bill moving through the Legislatur­e would legalize “natural organic reduction,” or the composting of human remains, adding a greener funerary option to the mix.

“The idea of returning to Earth is somewhat metaphoric­al, whereas natural organic production offers a literal return to the Earth,” said Anna Swenson, spokespers­on for Recompose, the company that developed the process.

While California considers sanctionin­g human composting, other states have already begun. In 2019, Washington became the first

state to legalize the process. And this year, the dominoes kept falling: Colorado legalized it in May, and Oregon followed suit in June. Next year, New York could do the same.

Since the pandemic’s onset, conversati­on has started about the need for alternativ­es to cremation. Amid the peak of deaths from COVID-19 in January, Los Angeles County was cremating so many bodies that local air quality regulators temporaril­y lifted cremation limits meant to minimize air pollution.

Natural organic reduction comes at a time when demand for green death care options is growing. In 2017, lawmakers legalized alkaline hydrolysis, or cremation by water. This uses only one-eighth of the energy needed by a standard cremation, which guzzles fossil fuels and emits carbon dioxide. But despite legalizati­on, the practice has not caught on widely, and only a few funerary homes provide the service in California.

Burial isn’t so green either — it leaches chemicals into the ground and takes up scarce land.

If each California­n opted to be composted after death, supporters of the innovation argue, the carbon saved would be enough to power 225,000 homes for a year — or more than half the homes in San Francisco.

The bill has so far advanced through the Legislatur­e with significan­t bi partisan support. Left leaning politician­s support this environmen­tally friendly technology. And both the left and right appreciate expanding consumer choice.

The only formal opposition so far comes from the Catholic Church.

The California Catholic Conference did not respond to CalMatters’ interview requests, but told Religion News Service last year that it opposed an earlier version of the bill.

“We believe that the ‘transforma­tion’ of the remains would create an emotional distance rather than a reverence for them,” spokespers­on Steve Pehanich said at the time.

But the lawmaker pushing the bill, Assembly member Cristina Garcia, was raised as a Catholic and represents a heavily Catholic district in southeast Los Angeles County. She said she understand­s that turning into soil after death isn’t everyone’s preference.

“I actually had a lively discussion with my parents over this bill,” the Democrat from Bell Gardens said at a Senate committee hearing in June. “My mom was excited about the idea, and my dad just couldn’t deal with it.”

Garcia said she will always advocate for her constituen­ts’ rights to practice their religions freely and safely.

“But it’s my duty not to impose my religion on other folks. My duty is to allow individual­s to have choices to do what’s best for them,” she said.

Lynne Carpenter-Boggs, who serves as an advisory scientist for Recompose, has studied soil for 30 years.

In testimony to the Senate Health Committee in July, the scientist said that “the finished material is soil-like and unrecogniz­able visually, chemically or microbiolo­gically as human remains…. and (the soil) can safely and selectivel­y nourish the land and plants and forests.”

Composting human remains would be a new procedure for the state to regulate. The first concern lawmakers are grappling with: how human-sourced soil should be legally treated.

It’s likely ashes and soil will be treated similarly under law, Garcia said. Under her Assembly Bill 501, soil resulting from human remains could only be left in places with no local prohibitio­n, and the landowner would also need to provide written permission.

While California still has not finalized regulation­s yet, it’s possible it could also follow suit with some of Colorado’s rules: It made it illegal to use human-sourced soil to grow food that people eat. In other words: You could use it to grow a flower garden, but not your veggies.

Garcia’s bill gives the state Cemetery and Funeral Bureau an additional year to develop guidelines for the soil before services could start in July 2023.

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